A significant development in the cryptocurrency market is underway as the Bitcoin (BTC)
$91,967 reserves on Binance have reached their lowest levels in five years according to CryptoQuant data. While BTC is trading around $93,000, this decline might initially appear negative. However, experts emphasize it indicates a structural strengthening of the market. Historically, a decrease in Bitcoin on exchanges often marks periods of increased long-term confidence rather than selling pressure.
Self-Custody Trend and ETF Impact
One of the key drivers behind the reduction in reserves is the accelerating trend of “self-custody” among investors. As Bitcoin prices rise, long-term holders and high-net-worth individuals are choosing to move their assets to cold wallets. This reduces the amount of BTC available for sale on exchanges, thus minimizing potential selling pressure. This behavior, commonly observed in bull markets, points to a strong long-term belief rather than panic.
Adding to this is the introduction of spot Bitcoin ETFs. Giant financial organizations like BlackRock, Fidelity, and recently Vanguard, in the U.S., are attracting significant capital with their ETFs. However, Bitcoin stored in these products is held in institutional custody services rather than centralized exchanges. As a result, institutional participation in the market is accelerating, naturally reducing reserves on major exchanges like Binance. Analysts interpret this as a structural indicator of institutional adoption, not a risk signal.
Derivatives Market Reset and Technical Outlook
The sharp sell-off at the end of November, particularly during the Asian sessions, led to massive liquidations. Leveraged positions were closed, margin calls decreased, and the BTC amount on Binance temporarily fell. According to experts, this is a short-term mechanical effect, not indicative of a permanent shift in market sentiment.
Concurrent updates by Binance on compliance and regulations prompted some users to rebalance their assets. However, these steps are seen as part of regulatory normalization. Overall, the contraction of Bitcoin supply on exchanges tightens circulation. Such environments have historically supported price increases in the medium to long term. The current scenario suggests Bitcoin is in another accumulation phase.
The market’s technical indicators also support this view. CoinMarketCap data reveals BTC rebounded by 11% from its $82,000 low in November. After approximately $19 billion in liquidations, a phase of “seller fatigue” seems to have set in. The bullish signal in MACD and neutral RSI indicate room for upward movement, with $101,000 being a resistance level and $86,000 a key support point.
A similar pattern has emerged in the Ethereum
$3,139 front, as recent weeks have seen a decline in ETH reserves on major exchanges, indicating a shift towards staking and institutional custody solutions. Analysts propose that this trend is not exclusive to Bitcoin and may signal a broader structural transformation within major cryptocurrencies.


